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 New York (New York), USA - Son de la Frontera (Sound of the Frontier), an
unconventional Flamenco ensemble from southern Spain will bring its new concept
of Flamenco to the North American public with its self-titled US debut,
Son de la Frontera, on the
World Village label. Son de la Frontera have attracted attention with their
ingenious mix of traditional Flamenco
and Latin American sounds. American rock musician Jackson Browne seems
impressed. He is quoted as saying:
"The best new group I've heard recently, in any genre. A riveting tribute to the
seminal flamenco master Diego del Gastor, this CD embraces the tradition of
flamenco puro and succeeds in making it new."
From the dramatic opener, "Buleria Negra Del
Gastor," to stirring soleas like "Recuerdo" and "Como El Agua Entre Las Piedras" to hybrid pieces like the Middle Eastern-flavored "Arabesco" and the smoky
"Tangos de mi Novia," the members of Son de la Frontera convey unbridled
flamenco passion while also carving a wholly unique path in their personal
tribute to Spain's renowned guitar master and sonic innovator, Diego del Gastor.
In performing the music of maestro Gastor, the great guitarist and musical
visionary from Morón de la Frontera (in the province of
Sevilla), Son de la
Frontera is committed to exploring the cross-pollination of Spanish-based
traditions with sounds from four other continents, revealing flamenco's ancient
Moorish and Middle Eastern heritage while also blending in rhythmic and melodic
elements from Cuba, Argentina, Colombia and Venezuela. Throughout his
illustrious career, Gastor (1908-1973) was known for his melding of Latin sounds
with flamenco traditions. Son de la Frontera expands on his rich legacy by being
the first flamenco group to prominently feature the Cuban tres (literally
"three" in Spanish), a small, guitar-like instrument with three sets of double
metal strings.
The tres was established in the classic sexteto format of the
1920s and later popularized by Arsenio Rodriguez, the blind tres virtuoso whose
ensemble was the most influential band in Cuba during the 1940s and 1950s. Led
by
Raúl Rodríguez on the tres, Son de la Frontera also includes two of Gastor's
descendants: Spanish guitar virtuoso
Paco
De Amparo and flamenco dancer
Pepe
Torres (both grand-nephews of the maestro). The group is rounded out by vocalist
Moi
De Moron and percussionist
Manuel Flores, both of whom were born and raised
in the flamenco hotbed of Gastor's beloved Moron de la Frontera. Together they
create a scintillating chemistry on their United States debut.
The CD is full of
stirring falsetas and precision unison lines between Rodriguez's steel-stringed
tres and Amparo's nylon-stringed guitar, exhilarating flurries of synchronized
handclaps (compas) from Flores and Moron, dramatic, pulse-quickening "taps" from
dancer Torres and intensely passionate vocals from Moron. Gastor's compositions
illuminate the Middle Eastern influences on flamenco in the spirited zambra "Arabesco" while his soleas "Como El Agua Entre Las Piedras" and "Recuerdo" are laden with
emotion.
Elsewhere, Gastor's joyful rumba "Tangos de mi Novia" uncovers an
Argentine connection to flamenco, - while the brisk interplay between
Rodriguez's tres and Amparo's strummed guitar on that buoyant piece also adds
the infectious spirit of a Cuban tumbao rhythm. The album's 9-minute
centerpiece, "Cambiaron Los Tiempos," is a stunning showcase for each individual
in the ensemble to stretch out instrumentally on a danceable seguiriya form.
The
members of Son de la Frontera met in 1998 while playing together in the band
supporting Rodriguez's mother, the renowned Spanish singer Martirio. As he
explains, "All of the band's members loved the legacy of Diego del Gastor, and
we began experimenting with his music, incorporating the Cuban tres that my
mother brought back for me from Havana. It was a special souvenir from her
appearance at the 90th birthday celebration for the great Cuban guitarist Compay
Segundo [of the Buena Vista Social Club], For me, bringing the Cuban tres to
flamenco was a natural extension of Gastor's creative vision."
Son de la Frontera will be performing live on February 3 ,2006, at Hothouse
in Chicago (Illinois) and February 4, 2006, at Town Hall as part of the New York Flamenco Festival 2006
in New York City.
[Buy
Son de la Frontera].
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